We are here at the last major of the year and a lot of people are asking me if Andy Murray is past his best. The answer is: I don’t know. It is a bit like the astronauts who have been to the moon, everything after that is a little bit inferior. Andy’s Wimbledon win […]

So that's it for another year. Wimbledon is over and I miss it already. As a child it was always on the telly and I couldn’t wait for it to finish, but now as a grown-up involved in the coverage I can’t get enough.

Rafa Nadal is the world No.1 but, after their final meeting of the season, Novak Djokovic is the best player in the world on current form. Indoors on Monday night, Djokovic was surgical in the way he dealt with the great Spaniard. There is no doubt Nadal could have played better but I have seen […]

Let me start by boring you with some numbers. This is Andy Murray’s fifth successive semi-final at Wimbledon. He’s been in the final of the last three grand slams he has played in and he is the world No.2.

Roger Federer's defeat to Sergiy Stakhovsky is a worry for his many fans. It’s a fact that the seven-time Wimbledon champion is losing matches he would not have lost in his 20s, and it could be said that his supreme sporting powers are diminishing fractionally, yet I feel sure that he can still be a force at the major championships.

There have been many differing theories as to why Andy Murray couldn’t beat Novak Djokovic in Sunday's absorbing Australian Open final, ranging from the feather which disrupted his rhythm between his first and second serves at 2-2 in the second set tiebreak to his gnarled feet which needed treatment.

Roger Federer is playing such fluid tennis he must be confident he can snag his 18th grand slam at the Australian Open – and that’s not good news for Andy Murray, who has never beaten the Swiss at one of the majors.